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Senate calls for audit over counties’ delayed salaries

Senate calls for audit over counties’ delayed salaries
Homambay Senator Moses Kajwang’ chairing the Senate’s County Public Accounts Committee on Monday, February,2,2026.PHOTO/https://www.facebook.com/ParliamentKE

The Senate’s County Public Accounts Committee (CPAC) has directed the Office of the Auditor-General to conduct an in-depth analysis to establish the exact amount owed by the 47 county governments to their employees in delayed salaries, unremitted statutory deductions, gratuity, pension contributions, and Sacco remittances.

Taking to their social handles on Tuesday, February 3, 2026, the Parliament has noted that the directive was arrived at during a session in which the Committee grilled Bungoma Governor Kenneth Lusaka over queries raised by the Auditor-General in the county’s financial statements for the 2024/2025 financial year.

The Auditor-General was ordered to submit a consolidated report covering all 47 counties to the Committee within seven days.

The Committee, chaired by Homabay Senator Moses Kajwang’, decided after concerns over a recurring pattern in which county governments deduct money from employees’ salaries but fail to remit the funds to the relevant agencies.

“It is now clear that counties are mistreating the people who work for them,” Kajwang’ said.

A screengrab by People Daily Digital, posted by https://www.facebook.com/ParliamentKE/FACEBOOK

The Committee noted that it was particularly concerned by the occasioned delays in settling gratuity payments for contracted staff after they exit service, a situation he noted has pushed many former employees into financial hardship.

Although the analysis will cover all 47 counties, the Committee ordered theAuditor-General to begin with Bungoma County, which was the focus of deliberations held on Monday, February 2,2026.

Bungoma County has yet to pay gratuity to staff who served under former Governor Wycliffe Wangamati during the five years between 2017 and 2022.

Lusaka confirmed that staff who served between 2013 and 2017 had been paid.

The governor was questioned by Bungoma Senator David Wakoli, who pointed out that gratuity for tutors who served during Lusaka’s first term in 2014 had not been settled.

By the end of the last financial year on June 30, 2025, the county owed its employees Sh549 million in unremitted pension contributions. According to the Auditor-General, Bungoma County had accumulated salary arrears amounting to Sh1.7 billion by the same date, covering unpaid salaries for May and June 2025.

Governor Lusaka told the Committee that the Ksh1.7 billion in salary arrears had since been settled, leaving a balance of Ksh549 million comprising unremitted statutory deductions to pension firms among other agencies.

Lusaka attributed the problem to the failure of the previous administration to remit deductions and supported calls for accountability against those responsible.

“Those who failed to remit deducted salaries must be pursued and prosecuted,” Lusaka said.

Bungoma Governor Ken Lusaka, appearing before the Senate’s County Public Accounts Committee on Monday, February, 2, 2026.PHOTO/https://www.facebook.com/ParliamentKE/FACEBOOK.

He urged the Auditor-General to conduct a deeper analysis of the Ksh549 million to determine whether the deductions relate to taxes, pension contributions, Sacco remittances, or other statutory obligations.

In view of the rising concerns, the Committee directed the Auditor-General to adopt an ageing analysis approach, categorising outstanding obligations based on how long they have remained unpaid, to help identify chronic delays, track payment trends, and inform corrective action.

Author

Ndiritu Wanjiru

N.W.

View all posts by Ndiritu Wanjiru

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